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Codes and Keys
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Codes and Keys
Current price: $38.99
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Barnes and Noble
Codes and Keys
Current price: $38.99
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Props to
Zooey Deschanel
for finally cheering
Ben Gibbard
up. On
Narrow Stairs
, the
Death Cab
frontman sang songs like
"You Could Do Better Than Me"
and
"Pity and Fear,"
filling the album with the sort of articulate, hyper-literate gloominess you might expect from a depressed poetry major.
Codes and Keys
, released three years after
and two years after his marriage to
Deschanel
, paints a brighter picture. Gone are the breakup ballads, the odes to lost love, the down-in-the-dumps sentiment that filled most of
's earlier work. Instead, the album offers up a handful of odes to the sunny side of life.
Gibbard
alludes to his wife often, referencing her retro charm on
"Morning Morning"
("She may be young but she only likes old things/And modern music, it ain't to her tastes") and laying out a plan for the rest of their married life with
"Doors Unlocked and Open"
("We'll live in slow motion and be free/with doors unlocked and open"). Beneath his vocals, more changes are taking place: a move away from guitar-based song arrangements, a stronger emphasis on keyboards, a willingness to explore the electro-acoustic link between
the Postal Service
,
's most famous side-project.
still sounds like a
album, but the guys explore the benefits of the recording studio more than ever before, boosting
Jason McGerr
's drums with bits of programmed percussion and scaling back their guitar riffs to sparse, articulate clumps of notes that ring out into the ether. There's a new-found emphasis on open space, on electronics, on
Kid A
-inspired webs of feedback and distortion that are draped behind the songs like ambient backdrops. It's not all machines and
Eno
-esque production -- a simple barroom piano opens up the title track, and
"Stay Young, Go Dancing"
(whose title would've seemed far out of place on any other
record) begins with an acoustic guitar -- but
certainly emphasizes the "studio" in "studio album," focusing as much on the music's presentation as its content. Luckily, there's enough genuine melody at the core of these songs to warrant their arrangements. ~ Andrew Leahey
Zooey Deschanel
for finally cheering
Ben Gibbard
up. On
Narrow Stairs
, the
Death Cab
frontman sang songs like
"You Could Do Better Than Me"
and
"Pity and Fear,"
filling the album with the sort of articulate, hyper-literate gloominess you might expect from a depressed poetry major.
Codes and Keys
, released three years after
and two years after his marriage to
Deschanel
, paints a brighter picture. Gone are the breakup ballads, the odes to lost love, the down-in-the-dumps sentiment that filled most of
's earlier work. Instead, the album offers up a handful of odes to the sunny side of life.
Gibbard
alludes to his wife often, referencing her retro charm on
"Morning Morning"
("She may be young but she only likes old things/And modern music, it ain't to her tastes") and laying out a plan for the rest of their married life with
"Doors Unlocked and Open"
("We'll live in slow motion and be free/with doors unlocked and open"). Beneath his vocals, more changes are taking place: a move away from guitar-based song arrangements, a stronger emphasis on keyboards, a willingness to explore the electro-acoustic link between
the Postal Service
,
's most famous side-project.
still sounds like a
album, but the guys explore the benefits of the recording studio more than ever before, boosting
Jason McGerr
's drums with bits of programmed percussion and scaling back their guitar riffs to sparse, articulate clumps of notes that ring out into the ether. There's a new-found emphasis on open space, on electronics, on
Kid A
-inspired webs of feedback and distortion that are draped behind the songs like ambient backdrops. It's not all machines and
Eno
-esque production -- a simple barroom piano opens up the title track, and
"Stay Young, Go Dancing"
(whose title would've seemed far out of place on any other
record) begins with an acoustic guitar -- but
certainly emphasizes the "studio" in "studio album," focusing as much on the music's presentation as its content. Luckily, there's enough genuine melody at the core of these songs to warrant their arrangements. ~ Andrew Leahey